Multiple interfaces in a storage enclosure

ABSTRACT

Provided is a system for interfacing with storage units, including a backplane, at least one slot in the storage enclosure for receiving one storage unit, and two physical interfaces on the backplane for at least one slot. The storage unit is capable of being positioned in the slot to mate with one of the two physical interfaces for the slot, wherein each physical interface supports different storage interconnect architectures.

CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is related to the following copending and commonly assigned patent applications filed on the same date hereof:

-   -   “An Adaptor Supporting Different Protocols”, by Pak-Lung Seto         and Deif Atallah, having attorney docket no. P17716; and     -   “Enclosure Management Device”, by Pak-Lung Set, having attorney         docket no. P17719.

BACKGROUND

1. Field

The present embodiments relate to a method, system, and program for supporting multiple interfaces in a storage enclosure.

2. Description of the Related Art

An adaptor or multi-channel protocol controller enables a device coupled to the adaptor to communicate with one or more connected end devices according to a storage interconnect architecture, also known as a hardware interface, where a storage interconnect architecture defines a standard way to communicate and recognize such communications, such as Serial Attached Small Computer System Interface (SCSI) (SAS), Serial Advanced Technology Attachment (SATA), Fibre Channel, etc. These storage interconnect architectures allow a device to maintain one or more connections to another end device via a point-to-point connection, an arbitrated loop of devices, an expander providing a connection to further end devices, or a fabric comprising interconnected switches providing connections to multiple end devices. In the SAS/SATA architecture, a SAS port is comprised of one or more SAS PHYs, where each SAS PHY interfaces a physical layer, i.e., the physical interface or connection, and a SAS link layer having multiple protocol link layer. Communications from the SAS PHYs in a port are processed by the transport layers for that port. There is one transport layer for each SAS port to interface with each type of application layer supported by the port. A “PHY” as defined in the SAS protocol is a device object that is used to interface to other devices and a physical interface. Further details on the SAS architecture for devices and expanders is described in the technology specification “Information Technology—Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)”, reference no. ISO/IEC 14776-150:200x and ANSI INCITS.***:200x PHY layer (Jul. 9, 2003), published by ANSI; details on the Fibre Channel architecture are described in the technology specification “Fibre Channel Framing and Signaling Interface”, document no. ISO/IEC AWI 14165-25; details on the SATA architecture are described in the technology specification “Serial ATA: High Speed Serialized AT Attachment” Rev. 1.0A (January 2003).

Within an adaptor, the PHY layer performs the serial to parallel conversion of data, so that parallel data is transmitted to layers above the PHY layer, and serial data is transmitted from the PHY layer through the physical interface to the PHY layer of a receiving device. In the SAS specification, there is one set of link layers for each SAS PHY layer, so that effectively each link layer protocol engine is coupled to a parallel-to-serial converter in the PHY layer. A connection path connects to a port coupled to each PHY layer in the adaptor and terminate in a physical interface within another device or on an expander device, where the connection path may comprise a cable or etched paths on a printed circuit board.

An expander is a device that facilitates communication and provides for routing among multiple SAS devices, where multiple SAS devices and additional expanders connect to the ports on the expander, where each port has one or more SAS PHYs and corresponding physical interfaces. The expander also extends the distance of the connection between SAS devices. The expander may route information from a device connecting to a SAS PHY on the expander to another SAS device connecting to the expander PHYs. In SAS, using the expander requires additional serial to parallel conversions in the PRY layers of the expander ports. Upon receiving a frame, a serial-to-parallel converter, which may be part of the PHY, converts the received data from serial to parallel to route internally to an output SAS PHY, which converts the frame from parallel to serial to the target device. The SAS PHY may convert parallel data to serial data through one or more encoders and convert serial data to parallel data through a parallel data builder and one or more decoders. A phased lock loop (PLL) may be used to track incoming serial data and lock into the frequency and phase of the signal. This tracking of the signal may introduce noise and error into the signal.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

Referring now to the drawings in which like reference numbers represent corresponding parts throughout:

FIGS. 1 and 2 illustrate a system and adaptor in accordance with embodiments;

FIGS. 3, 4, and 5 illustrate operations implemented in the adaptor of FIGS. 1 and 2;

FIG. 6 illustrates a perspective view of a storage enclosure in accordance with embodiments;

FIG. 7 illustrates a storage enclosure backplane and attached storage server in accordance with embodiments;

FIG. 8 illustrates an expander PHY in accordance with embodiments;

FIG. 9 illustrates a front view of a rack including storage enclosures and servers in accordance with embodiments;

FIG. 10 illustrates an adaptor that may be used with the storage server in FIG. 7 in accordance with embodiments; and

FIG. 11 illustrates system components that may be used with the described embodiments.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

In the following description, reference is made to the accompanying drawings which form a part hereof and which illustrate several embodiments. It is understood that other embodiments may be utilized and structural and operational changes may be made.

Supporting Multiple Storage Interconnect Architectures in an Adaptor

FIG. 1 illustrates a computing environment in which embodiments may be implemented. A host system 2 includes one or more central processing units (CPU) 4 (only one is shown), a volatile memory 6, non-volatile storage 8, an operating system 10, and one or more adaptors 12 a, 12 b which maintains physical interfaces to connect with other end devices directly in a point-to-point connection or indirectly through one or more expanders, one or more switches in a fabric or one or more devices in an arbitrated loop. An application program 16 further executes in memory 6 and is capable of transmitting to and receiving information from the target device through one of the physical interfaces in the adaptors 12 a, 12 b. The host 2 may comprise any computing device known in the art, such as a mainframe, server, personal computer, workstation, laptop, handheld computer, telephony device, network appliance, virtualization device, storage controller, etc. Various CPUs 4 and operating system 10 known in the art may be used. Programs and data in memory 6 may be swapped into storage 8 as part of memory management operations.

The operating system 10 may load a device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c for each protocol supported in the adaptor 12 a, 12 b to enable communication with a device communicating using the supported protocol and also load a bus driver 24, such as a Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) interface, to enable communication with a bus 26. Further details of PCI interface are described in the publication “PCI Local Bus, Rev. 2.3”, published by the PCI-SIG. The operating system 10 may load device drivers 20 a, 20 b, 20 c supported by the adaptors 12 a, 12 b upon detecting the presence of the adaptors 12 a, 12 b, which may occur during initialization or dynamically, such as the case with plug-and-play device initialization. In the embodiment of FIG. 1, the operating system 10 loads three protocol device drivers 20 a, 20 b, 20 c. For instance, the device drivers 20 a, 20 b, 20 c may support the SAS, SATA, and Fibre Channel point-to-point storage interfaces, i.e., interconnect architectures. Additional or fewer device drivers may be loaded based on the number of device drivers the adaptor 12 supports.

FIG. 2 illustrates an embodiment of adaptor 12, which may comprise the adaptors 12 a, 12 b. Each adaptor includes a plurality of physical interfaces 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n, which may include the transmitter and receiver circuitry and other connection hardware. The physical interface may connect to another device via cables or a path etched on a printed circuit board so that devices on the printed circuit board communicate via etched paths. The physical interfaces 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n may provide different physical interfaces for different device connections, such as one physical interface 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n for connecting to a SAS/SATA device and another interface for a Fibre Channel device. Each physical interface 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n may be coupled to a PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n within expander 34. The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n provides for an encoding scheme, such as 8 b 10 b, to translate bits, and a clocking mechanism, such as a phased lock loop (PLL). The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n would include a serial-to-parallel converter to perform the serial-to-parallel conversion and the PLL to track the incoming data and provide the data clock of the incoming data to the serial-to-parallel converter to use when performing the conversion. Data is received at the adaptor 12 in a serial format, and is converted at the SAS PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n to the parallel format for transmission within the adaptor 12. The SAS PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n further provides for error detection, bit shift and amplitude reduction, and the out-of-band (OOB) signaling to establish an operational link with another SAS PHY in another device. The term interface may refer to the physical interface or the interface performing operations on the received data implemented as circuitry, or both.

The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n further performs the speed negotiation with the PHY in the external device transmitting data to adaptor 12. In certain embodiments, the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n may be programmed to allow speed negotiation and detection of different protocols transmitting at the same or different transmission speeds. For instance, SATA and SAS transmissions can be detected because they are transmitted at speeds of 1.5 gigahertz (GHz) and 3 GHz and Fibre Channel transmissions can be detected because they are transmitted at 1.0625 GHz, 2.125 GHz, and 4.25 GHz. Because link transmission speeds may be different for certain storage interfaces, the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n may detect storage interfaces having different link speeds by maintaining information on speeds for different storage interfaces. However, certain different storage interfaces, such as SAS and SATA, may transmit at the same link speeds and support common transport protocols. If storage interfaces transmit at a same link speed, then the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n may distinguish among storage interfaces capable of transmitting at the same speed by checking the transmission format to determine the storage interface and protocol, where the link protocol defines the characteristics of the transmission, including speed and transmission data format.

For instance, the SAS and SATA protocol can be distinguished not only by their transmission speeds, but also by their use of the OOB signal. Other protocols, such as Fibre Channel do not use the OOB signal. Fibre Channel, SAS and SATA all have a four byte primitive. The primitive of SATA can be distinguished because the first byte of the SATA primitive indicates “K28.3”, whereas the first byte of the SAS and Fibre Channel primitive indicates “K28.5”. The SAS and Fibre Channel primitives can be distinguished based on the content of the next three bytes of their primitives, which differ. Thus, the content of the primitives can be used to distinguish between the SAS, SATA and Fibre Channel protocols. Additionally, different of the protocols, such as SAS and Fibre Channel have different handshaking protocols. Thus, the handshaking protocol being used by the device transmitting the information can be used to distinguish the storage connect interface being used.

The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n forwards the frame to the link layer 36 in the expander 34. The link layer 36 may maintain a set of elements for each protocol supported by a port, such as a Serial SCSI Protocol (SSP) link layer 38 to process SSP frames, a Serial Tunneling Protocol (STP) layer 38 b, a Serial Management Protocol (SMP) layer 38 c, and a Fibre Channel link layer 38 d to support the Fibre Channel protocol for transporting the frames. Within the expander 34, information is routed from one PHY to another. The transmitted information may include primitives, packets, frames, etc., and may be used to establish the connection and open the address frame. A router 40 routes transmissions between the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b and the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n. The router 40 maintains a router table 41 providing an association of PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n to protocol engines 42 a, 42 b, such that a transmission from a PHY layer or protocol engine is routed to the corresponding protocol engine or PHY layer, respectively, indicated in the router table 41. If the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b support the transport protocol, e.g., SSP, STP, SMP, Fibre Channel protocol, etc., associated with the link layer 38 a, 38 b, 83 c, 38 d forwarding the transmission, then the router 40 may use any technique known in the art to select among the multiple protocol engines 42 a, 42 b to process the transmission, such as round robin, load balancing based on protocol engine 42 a, 42 b utilization, etc. The Fibre Channel Protocol comprises the transport layer for handling information transmitted on a Fibre Channel storage interface. Data may be communicated in frames, packets, primitives or any other data transmission format known in the art. A transport layer comprises any circuitry, including software or hardware, that is use to provide a virtual error-free, point to point connection to allow for the transmission of information between devices so that transmitted information arrives un-corrupted and in the correct order. The transport layer further establishes, e.g., opens, and dissolves connections between devices.

A transport protocol provides a set of transmission rules and handshaking procedures used to implement a transport layer, often defined by an industry standard, such as SAS, SATA, Fibre Channel, etc. The transport layer and protocol may comprise those transport protocols described herein and others known in the art. The protocol engine 42 a, 42 b comprises the hardware and/or software that implements different transport protocols to provide transport layer functionality for different protocols.

Each protocol engine 42 a, 42 b is capable of performing protocol related operations for all the protocols supported by the adaptor 12. Alternatively, different protocol engines may support different protocols. For instance, protocol engine 42 b may support the same transport layers as protocol engine 42 a or a different set of transport layers. Each protocol engine 42 a, 42 b implements a port layer 44, and a transport layer, such as a SSP transport layer 46 a, STP transport layer 46 b, SMP transport layer 46 c, and a Fibre Channel Protocol transport layer 46 d. Further, the protocol engines 30 a, 30 b may support the transport and network layer related operations for the supported protocols. The port layer 44 interfaces between the link layers 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, 38 d via the router 40 and the transport layers 46 a, 46 b, 46 c, 46 d to transmit information to the correct transport layer or link layer. The PHYs 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n and corresponding physical interfaces 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n may be organized into one or more ports, where each SAS port has a unique SAS address. The port comprises a component or construct to which interfaces are assigned. An address comprises any identifier used to identify a device or component. The protocol engines 42 a, 42 b may further include one or more virtual PRY layers to enable communication with virtual PHY layers in the router 40. A virtual PHY is an internal PHY that connects to another PHY inside of the device, and not to an external PHY. Data transmitted to the virtual PHY typically does not need to go through a serial-to-parallel conversion.

Each protocol engine 42 a, 42 b includes an instance of the protocol transport layers 46 a, 46 b, 46 c, 46 d, where there is one transport layer to interface with each type of application layer 48 a, 48 b, 48 c in the application layer 50. The application layer 50 may be supported in the adaptor 12 or host system 2 and provides network services to the end users. For instance, the SSP transport layer 46 a and Fibre Channel Protocol (FCP) transport layer 46 b interface with a SCSI application layer 48 a, the STP transport layer 46 c interfaces with an Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA) application layer 48 b, and the SMP transport layer 46 d interfaces with a management application layer 48 c. Further details of the ATA technology are described in the publication “Information Technology—AT Attachment with Packet Interface—6 (ATA/ATAPI-6)”, reference no. ANSI INCITS 361-2002 (September, 2002).

All the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n may share the same link layer and protocol link layers, or there may be a separate instance of each link layer and link layer protocol 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, 38 d for each PHY. Further, each protocol engine 42 a, 42 b may include one port layer 44 for all ports including the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n or may include a separate instance of the port layer 44 for each port in which one or more PHY layers and the corresponding physical interfaces are organized. Further details on the operations of the physical layer, PHY layer, link layer, port layer, transport layer, and application layer and components implementing such layers described herein are found in the technology specification “Information Technology—Serial Attached SCSI (SAS)”, referenced above.

The router 40 allows the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b to communicate to any of the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n. The protocol engines 42 a, 42 b communicate parallel data to the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n, which include parallel-to-serial converters to convert the parallel data to serial data for transmittal through the corresponding physical interface 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n. The data may be communicated to a PHY on the target device or an intervening external expander. A target device is a device to which information is transmitted from a source or initiator device attempting to communicate with the target device.

With the described embodiments of FIGS. 1 and 2, one protocol engine 42 a, 42 b having the port and transport layers can manage transmissions to multiple PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n. The transport layers 46 a, 46 b, 46 c, 46 d of the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b may only engage with one open connection at a time. However, if delays are experienced from the target on one open connection, the protocol engine 42 a, 42 b can disconnect and establish another connect to process I/O requests from that other connection to avoid latency delays for those target devices trying to establish a connection. This embodiment provides greater utilization of the protocol engine bandwidth by allowing each protocol engine to multiplex among multiple target devices and switch among connections. The protocol engines 42 a, 42 b and physical interface have greater bandwidth than the target device, so that the target device throughput is lower than the protocol engine 42 a, 42 b throughput. In certain embodiments, the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b may multiplex between different PHYs 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n to manage multiple targets.

Allowing one protocol engine to handle multiple targets further reduces the number of protocol engines that need to be implemented in the adaptor to support all the targets.

FIG. 3 illustrates operations performed by the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n and the link layer 36 to open a connection with an initiating device, where the initiating device may transmit using SAS, Fibre Channel, or some other storage interface (storage interconnect architecture). The operation to establish the connection may occur after the devices are discovered during identification and link initialization. In response to a reset or power-on sequence, the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b may begin (at block 100) link initialization by receiving link initialization information, such as primitives, from an initiator device at one physical interface 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n (FIG. 2). The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n coupled to the receiving physical interface 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n performs (at block 102) speed negotiation to ensure that the link operates at the highest frequency. In certain embodiments, the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n includes the capability to detect and negotiate speeds for different storage interfaces, where the different storage interfaces have different transmission characteristics, such as different transmission speeds and/or transmission information, such as is the case with the SAS/SATA and Fibre Channel storage interfaces. The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n then determines (at block 104) the storage interface used for the transmission to establish the connection, which may be determined from the transmission speed if a unique transmission speed is associated with a storage interface or from characteristics of the transmission, such as information in the header of the transmission, format of the transmission, etc. The PHY layer 32 a, 32 b forwards (at block 106) the information to the link layer 36 indicating which detected storage interface to use (SAS/SATA or Fibre Channel).

If (at block 108) the determined storage interface complies with the SATA protocol, then the connection is established (at block 110) and no further action is necessary. If (at block 108) the connection utilizes the SAS protocol, then the link layer 36 processes (at block 112) an OPEN frame to determine the SAS transport protocol to use (e.g., SSP, STP, SMP, Fibre Channel Protocol). The OPEN frame is then forwarded (at block 114) to the determined SAS protocol link layer 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, 38 d (SSP, STP, SMP, Fibre Channel Protocol) to process. The protocol link layer 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, 38 d then establishes (at block 116) an open connection for all subsequent frames transmitted as part of that opened connection. The connection must be opened using the OPEN frame between an initiator and target port before communication may begin. A connection is established between one SAS initiator PHY in the SAS initiator port and one SAS target PHY in the SAS target port. If (at blocks 108 and 118) the storage interface complies with a point-to-point Fibre Channel protocol, then the connection is established (at block 120). Otherwise, if (at blocks 108 and 118) the storage interface complies with the Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop protocol, then the Fibre Channel link layer 38 d establishes (at block 122) the open connection for all subsequent frames transmitted as part of connection. The Fibre Channel link layer 38 d may establish the connection using Fibre Channel open primitives. Further details of the Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop protocol are described in the publication “Information Technology—Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop (FC-AL-2)”, having document no. ANSI INCITS 332-1999.

With the described implementations, the PHY layer 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n is able to determine the storage interface for different storage interfaces that transmit at different transmission link speeds and/or have different transmission characteristics. This determined storage interface information is then forwarded to the link layer 36 to use to determine which link layer protocol and transport protocol to use to establish the connection, such as a SAS link layer protocol, e.g., 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, or the Fibre Channel link layer protocol 38 d, where the different protocols that may be used require different processing to handle.

FIG. 4 illustrates operations performed by the router 40 to select a protocol engine 42 a, 42 b to process the received frame. Upon receiving (at block 150) a transmission from the protocol link layer 38 a, 38 b, 38 c, 38 d, such as a frame, packet, primitive, etc., to establish a connection, if (at block 152) a router table 41 provides an association of a protocol engine 42 a, 42 b for the PHY 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n forwarding the transmission, then the router 40 forwards (at block 154) the transmission to the protocol engine 42 a, 42 b associated with the PHY indicated in the router table 41. If (at block 152) the router table 41 does not provide an association of a PHY layer and protocol engine and if (at block 156) the protocol of the transmission complies with the SATA or Fibre Channel point-to-point protocol, then the router 40 selects (at block 158) one protocol engine to use based on a selection criteria, such as load balancing, round robin, etc. If (at block 160) all protocol engines 46 a, 46 b capable of handling the determined protocol are busy, then fail is returned (at block 162) to the device that sent a transmission. Otherwise, if (at block 160) a protocol engine 46 a, 46 b is available, then one protocol engine 46 a, 46 b is selected (at block 164) to use for the transmission and the transmission is forwarded to the selected protocol engine.

If (at block 156) the protocol of the connection request complies with the SAS or Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop protocol, then the router 40 selects (at block 166) one protocol engine 46 a, 46 b to use based on a selection criteria. If (at block 168) all protocol engines 46 a, 46 b capable of handling the determined protocol are busy, then the PHY receiving the transmission is signaled that the connection request failed, and the PHY 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n returns (at block 170) an OPEN reject command to the transmitting device. Otherwise, if (at block 168) a protocol engine 46 a, 46 b is available, then an entry is added (at block 172) to the router table 41 associating the PHY 42 a, 42 b . . . 42 n forwarding the transmission wit one protocol engine 46 a, 46 b. The router 40 signals (at block 174) the PHY that the connection is established, and the PHY returns OPEN accept. The router 40 forwards (at block 176) the transmission to the selected protocol engine 46 a, 46 b.

Additionally, the application layer 50 may open a connection to transmit information to a target device by communicating the open request frames to one protocol engine 42 a, 42 b, using load balancing or some other selecting technique, where the protocol engine 42 a, 42 b transport and port layers transmit the open connection frames to the router 40 to direct the link initialization to the appropriate link layer and PHY layer.

FIG. 5 illustrates operations performed in the adaptor 12 to enable a device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c to communicate information to a target device through an adaptor 12 a, 12 b (FIG. 1). At block 200, a device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c transmits information to initiate communication with a connected device by sending (at block 202) information to a protocol engine 46 a, 46 b. A device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c may perform any operation to select a protocol engine to use. The protocol engine 46 a, 46 b receiving the transmission forwards (at block 204) the transmission to the router 40. If (at block 206) the protocol used by the device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c is SATA or Fibre Channel point-to-point protocol, then the router 40 selects (at block 208) a PHY 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n connected to the target device (directly or indirectly through one or more expanders or a fabric) for transmission and sends the transmission to the selected PHY. If (at block 206) the protocol used by the device driver 20 a, 20 b, 20 c initiating the transmission is SAS or Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop, then the router 40 selects (at block 210) a PHY 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n to use to establish communication with the target device and add an entry to the router table associating the protocol engine 42 a, 42 b forwarding the transmission with the selected PHY, so that the indicated protocol engine and PHY are used for communications through that SAS or Fibre Channel Arbitrated Loop connection. The router 40 then forwards (at block 212) the open connection request through the selected PHY 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n to the target device.

Described embodiments provide techniques for allowing connections with different storage interfaces that communicate at different transmission speeds and/or different transmission characteristics. In this way, a single adaptor 12 may provide multiple connections for different storage interfaces (storage interconnect architectures) that communicate using different transmission characteristics, such as transmitting at different link speeds or including different protocol information in the transmissions. For instance, the adaptor 12 may be included in an enclosure that is connected to multiple storage devices on a rack or provides the connections for storage devices within the same enclosure.

Still further, with the described embodiments, there may be only one serial to parallel conversion between the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n performing parallel-to-serial conversion and the protocol engines 42 a, 42 b within the adaptor. In implementations where the expander is located external to the adaptor, three parallel-to-serial conversions may be performed to communicate data from the connections to the router (serial to parallel), from the router in the expander to the adaptor (parallel to serial), and at the adaptor from the connection to the protocol engine (serial to parallel). Certain described embodiments eliminate the need for two of these conversions by allowing the parallel data to be transmitted directly from the router to the protocol engines in the same adaptor component. Reducing the number of parallel to serial conversions and corresponding PLL tracking reduces data and bit errors that may be introduced by the frequency changes produced by the PLL in the converters and may reduce latency delays caused by such additional conversions.

Enclosure Architecture Supporting Multiple Protocols

FIG. 6 illustrates a storage enclosure 200 having a plurality of slots 202 a and 202 b in which storage units 203 may be inserted. The storage unit may comprise a removable disk, such as a magnetic hard disk drive, tape cassette, optical disk, solid state disk, etc., may be inserted. Although only two slots are shown, any number of slots may be included in the storage enclosure 200. The storage unit has a connector 205 to mate with one of the physical interfaces 204 a, 206 a and 204 b, 206 b on a backplane 208 of the enclosure 200 through one of the slots 202 a, 202 b, respectively. A backplane comprises a circuit board including connectors, interfaces, slots into which components are plugged. The slot 252 a, 252 b, 252 c comprises the space for receiving the storage unit 203 and may be delineated by a physical structure or boundaries, such as walls, guides, etc., or may comprise a space occupied by the storage unit 203 that is not defined by any physical structures or boundaries. The physical interfaces 204 a, 206 a and 204 b, 206 b correspond to the physical interfaces 30 a, 30 b . . . 30 n in the adaptor. For instance, if the storage unit 203 is capable of mating with physical interface 204 a, 204 b, then the user may rotate the storage unit 203 to allow the storage unit 203 to mate with that particular physical interface 204 a, 204 b. If the storage unit 203 is capable of mating with physical interface 206 a, 206 b, then the user may rotate the storage unit 203 assembly 180 degrees to mate with physical interfaces 206 a, 206 b. In this way a single slot provides interfaces for storage units whose physical interfaces have different physical configurations, such as a different size dimensions, different interface sizes, and different pin interconnect arrangements.

For instance, in certain embodiments, the physical interfaces 206 a and 206 b may be capable of mating with a SATA/SAS physical interface and the physical interfaces 204 a and 204 b may be capable of mating with a Fibre Channel physical interface. In this way a single slot 202 a, 202 b allows mating with the storage unit having physical interfaces having different physical configurations. For instance, if the storage unit 203 interface was designed to plug into a SAS/SATA interface, then the user would rotate the storage unit 203 to interface with the physical interface, e.g., 204 a, supporting that interface, whereas if the storage interface was designed to plug into a Fibre Channel interface, then the user would rotate the storage unit 203 to interface with the supporting physical interface, e.g., 206 a.

In certain embodiments, the storage unit 203 may include only one physical interface to mate with one physical interface, e.g., 204 a, 206 a in one slot, e.g., 202 a.

FIG. 7 illustrates an embodiment of the architecture of the backplane 258 of a storage enclosure 250, such as enclosure 200, having multiple slots 252 a, 252 b, 252 c (three are shown, but more or fewer may be provided), where each slot has two physical interfaces 254 a, 256 a, 254 b, 256 b, 254 c, 256 c. The physical interfaces 254 a, 254 b, 254 c and 256 a, 256 b, 256 c may have different physical configurations, e.g., size dimensions and pin arrangements, to support different storage interconnect architectures, e.g., SATA/SAS and Fibre Channel. An expander 260 on the backplane 258 has multiple expander PHYs 262 a, 262 b, 262 c. The expander PHYs 262 a, 262 b, 262 c may be organized into one or more ports, where each port is assigned to have one or more PHYs. Further, one PHY 262 a, 262 b, 262 c may be coupled to each pair of physical interfaces 254 a, 256 a, 254 b, 256 b, 254 c, 256 c in each slot 252 a, 252 b, 252 c. An expander function 266 routes information from PHYs 262 a, 262 b, 262 c to destination PHYs 264 a, 264 b, 264 c from where the information is forwarded to an end device directly or through additional expanders. FIG. 7 shows the destination PHYs 264 a, 264 b, 264 c connecting directly to the physical interfaces on an adaptor 280 in server 282.

In certain embodiments, a multidrop connector 266 a, 266 b, 266 c extends from the physical interface for each PHY 262 a, 262 b, 262 c to one of the slots 252 a, 252 b, 252 c, where each end on the multidrop connector 266 a, 266 b, 266 c is coupled to one of the interfaces 254 a, 256 a; 254 b, 256 b; and 254 c, 256 c, respectively, in the slots 252 a, 252 b, 252 c, respectively. A multidrop connector comprises a communication line with multiple access points, where the access points may comprise cable access points, etched path access points, etc. In this way, one multidrop connector provides the physical connection to different physical interfaces in one slot, where the different physical interfaces may have different physical dimensions and pin arrangements. To accommodate different physical interfaces, the multidrop connector 268 a, 268 b, 268 c terminators includes different physical connectors for mating with the different storage interconnect physical interfaces e.g., SAS/SATA, Fibre Channel, that may be on the storage unit 203, e.g., disk drive, inserted in the slot 252 a, 252 b, 252 c and mated to physical interface 254 a, 256 a, 254 b, 256 b, 254 c, 256 c. The multidrop connectors 266 a, 266 b, 266 c may comprise cables or paths etched on a printed circuit board.

FIG. 8 illustrates components within an expander PHY 300, such as expander PHYs 262 a, 262 b, 262 c, 264 a, 264 b, 264 c. An expander PHY 300 may include a PHY layer 302 to perform PHY operations, and a PHY link layer 304. Additionally, the PHY layer 302 may perform the operations described with respect to the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n in FIG. 2 whose operations are described in FIG. 3. The expander PHY layer 302 may include the capability to detect transmission characteristics for different hardware interfaces, i.e., storage interconnect architectures, e.g., SAS/SATA, Fibre Channel, etc., and forward information on the storage hardware interface to the link layer 302, where the link layer 302 uses that information to access the address of the target storage device of the transmission to select the expander PHY connected to the target device. This architecture for the expander PHYs allows the expander to handle data transmitted from different storage interconnect architectures having different transmission characteristics.

The expander may further include a router to route a transmission from one PHY to another PHY connecting to the target device or path to the target device. The expander router may further maintain a router table that associates PHYs with the address of the devices to which they are attached, so a transmission received on one PHY directed to an end device is routed to the PHY associated with that end device.

With respect to FIG. 7, the adaptor 280 in the server 282 may include the same architecture as the adaptor 12 in FIG. 2, including the expander 34 and protocol engine 42 a, 42 b architecture that operates as described with respect to the embodiments of FIGS. 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5. The adaptor 280 receives data from the expander 260 in the storage enclosure 250 via connection 290 and then forward the transmission to one of the protocol engines 288 a, 288 b in the manner described above. Each physical interface 284 a, 284 b, 284 c on the server adaptor 280 may connect to a different storage enclosure and each destination PHY 264 a, 264 b, 264 on the backplane 258 expander 260 may be coupled to a different server, thereby allowing different servers to connect to multiple storage enclosures and a storage enclosure to connect to different servers.

With the described embodiments, storage units, such as disk drives, having different connection interfaces may be inserted within the slots 252 a, 252 b, 252 c (FIG. 7) on the backplane 258 by rotating the orientation of the storage unit assembly when inserting the storage unit in the slot. Further, the adaptor 280 may support transmissions from the backplane 258 expander 260 using different storage interconnect architectures, such as SAS/SATA and Fibre Channel, by including the components and performing the operations described above with respect to FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 5. In this way, a single storage enclosure 250 may allow for use of storage units, such as disk drives, having different storage interfaces, i.e., storage interconnect architectures, with different physical interface arrangements, e.g., different dimensions and pin arrangements. The use of the adaptor 280 and expander 260 on the enclosure backplane both supporting storage interconnect architectures having different transmission characteristics, e.g., link speed and data format, allows for communication with an enclosure capable of including in its slots storage physical interfaces for different storage interconnect architectures, e.g., Fibre Channel, SAS/SATA.

FIG. 9 illustrates a storage rack 310 including mounted servers 312 a, 312 b and storage enclosures 314 a, 314 b. Only two of each are shown, but any number capable of being accommodated by the layout of the rack may be included. In this example, each server 312 a, 312 b is connected to each storage enclosure 314 a, 314 b. The storage enclosures 312 a, 312 b may include a backplane 258 as described with respect to FIGS. 6 and 7, and each server 312 a, 312 b may include an adaptor 280 as described with respect to FIGS. 2 and 7 to support storage units using different storage interconnect architectures that require different physical interfaces and have different transmission characteristics. Each storage enclosure and server may include multiple adaptor cards to allow for additional connections.

FIG. 10 illustrates an alternative embodiment of an adaptor 320 that may be substituted for the adaptor 280 in FIG. 7 connected to the storage enclosure 250. Adaptor 320 includes a plurality of ports 322, where each port includes one or more PHYs 324, and where each PHY 324 has a PHY layer 326, a link layer 328 and different protocol link layers, e.g., an SSP link layer 330 a, STP link layer 330 b, SMP link layer 330 c, and a Fibre Channel Protocol link layer 330 d. In a port 322, all the PHYs in that port share a link layer 332 and the transport layers, e.g., SSP transport layer 334 a, Fibre Channel Protocol 334 b, STP transport layer 334 c, and SMP transport layer 334 d. The PHY layer 326 and link layer 328 in the embodiment of FIG. 10 performs the operations of the PHY layers 32 a, 32 b . . . 32 n and link layer 36 as described with respect to FIGS. 2, 3, 4, and 54 to detect the transmission characteristics and corresponding storage interconnect architecture therefrom and use the detected storage interconnect architecture to process the packet and determine the link layer protocol, e.g., SSP, STP, SMP, Fibre Channel Protocol to use. However, in the embodiment of FIG. 2, multiple PHY layers in multiple ports may share the link layer, port layer and transport layers, whereas in the embodiment of FIG. 10, each PHY has its own link layer and each port has its own port layer and transport layers, thereby providing greater redundancy of components. The STP protocol can also uses SATA.

Described embodiments provide architectures to allow a single adaptor interface to be used to interface with devices using different storage interfaces, i.e., storage interconnect architectures, where some of the storage interfaces use different and non-overlapping link speeds. This overcomes the situation where a single adaptor/controller, such a SAS device, may not support storage interconnect architectures that have different transmission characteristics, such as is the case where an adaptor supporting SAS/SATA may not support the Fibre Channel interface because such an adaptor cannot detect data transmitted using the Fibre Channel interface (storage interconnect architecture) and thus cannot load the necessary drivers in the operating system to support Fibre Channel.

Additional Embodiment Details

The described embodiments may be implemented as a method, apparatus or article of manufacture using programming and/or engineering techniques to produce software, firmware, hardware, or any combination thereof. The term “article of manufacture” and “circuitry” as used herein refers to a state machine, code or logic implemented in hardware logic (e.g., an integrated circuit chip, Programmable Gate Array (PGA), Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), etc.) or a computer readable medium, such as magnetic storage medium (e.g., hard disk drives, floppy disks, tape, etc.), optical storage (CD-ROMs, optical disks, etc.), volatile and non-volatile memory devices (e.g., EEPROMs, ROMs, PROMs, RAMs, DRAMs, SRAMs, firmware, programmable logic, etc.). Code in the computer readable medium is accessed and executed by a processor. When the code or logic is executed by a processor, the circuitry would include the medium including the code or logic as well as the processor that executes the code loaded from the medium. The code in which preferred embodiments are implemented may further be accessible through a transmission media or from a file server over a network. In such cases, the article of manufacture in which the code is implemented may comprise a transmission media, such as a network transmission line, wireless transmission media, signals propagating through space, radio waves, infrared signals, etc. Thus, the “article of manufacture” may comprise the medium in which the code is embodied. Additionally, the “article of manufacture” may comprise a combination of hardware and software components in which the code is embodied, processed, and executed. Of course, those skilled in the art will recognize that many modifications may be made to this configuration, and that the article of manufacture may comprise any information bearing medium known in the art.

Additionally, the expander, PHYs, and protocol engines may be implemented in one or more integrated circuits on the adaptor or on the motherboard.

In the described embodiments, layers were shown as operating within specific components, such as the expander and protocol engines. In alternative implementations, layers may be implemented in a manner different than shown. For instance, the link layer and link layer protocols may be implemented with the protocol engines or the port layer may be implemented in the expander.

In the described embodiments, the protocol engines each support multiple transport protocols. In alternative embodiments, the protocol engines may support different transport protocols, so the expander 40 would direct communications for a particular protocol to that protocol supporting the determined protocol.

In the described embodiments, transmitted information is received at an adaptor card from a remote device over a connection. In alternative embodiments, the transmitted and received information processed by the transport protocol layer or device driver may be received from a separate process executing in the same computer in which the device driver and transport protocol driver execute.

In certain implementations, the device driver and network adaptor embodiments may be included in a computer system including a storage controller, such as a SCSI, Redundant Array of Independent Disk (RAID), etc., controller, that manages access to a non-volatile or volatile storage device, such as a magnetic disk drive, tape media, optical disk, etc. In alternative implementations, the network adaptor embodiments may be included in a system that does not include a storage controller, such as certain hubs and switches.

In certain implementations, the adaptor may be configured to transmit data across a cable connected to a port on the adaptor. In further embodiments, the adaptor may be configured to transmit data across etched paths on a printed circuit board. Alternatively, the adaptor embodiments may be configured to transmit data over a wireless network or connection.

In described embodiments, the storage interfaces supported by the adaptors comprised SATA, SAS and Fibre Channel. In additional embodiments, other storage interfaces may be supported. Additionally, the adaptor was described as supporting certain transport protocols, e.g. SSP, Fibre Channel Protocol, STP, and SMP. In further implementations, the adaptor may support additional transport protocols used for transmissions with the supported storage interfaces. The supported storage interfaces may transmit using different transmission characteristics, e.g., different link speeds and different protocol information included with the transmission. Further, the physical interfaces may have different physical configurations, i.e., the arrangement and number of pins and other physical interconnectors, when the different supported storage interconnect architectures use different physical configurations.

The adaptor 12 may be implemented on a network card, such as a Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) card or some other I/O card, or on integrated circuit components mounted on a system motherboard or backplane.

In described embodiments, the interfaces in the slot extend along the vertical length of the slot and are in a parallel orientation with respect to each other. In alternative embodiments, the two interfaces may be oriented in different ways with respect to each other and the slot depending on the corresponding interface on the storage unit assembly. Further, in additional implementations more than two physical interfaces may be included in the slot for the different protocols supported by the adaptor.

The illustrated logic of FIGS. 3, 4, and 5 show certain events occurring in a certain order. In alternative embodiments, certain operations may be performed in a different order, modified or removed. Moreover, operations may be added to the above described logic and still conform to the described embodiments. Further, operations described herein may occur sequentially or certain operations may be processed in parallel. Yet further, operations may be performed by a single processing unit or by distributed processing units.

FIG. 11 illustrates one implementation of a computer architecture 400 of the storage enclosures and servers in FIGS. 6 and 8. The architecture 400 may include a processor 402 (e.g., a microprocessor), a memory 404 (e.g., a volatile memory device), and storage 406 (e.g., a non-volatile storage, such as magnetic disk drives, optical disk drives, a tape drive, etc.). The storage 406 may comprise an internal storage device or an attached or network accessible storage. Programs in the storage 406 are loaded into the memory 404 and executed by the processor 402 in a manner known in the art. The architecture further includes an adaptor as described above with respect to FIGS. 1-7 to enable a point-to-point connection with an end device, such as a disk drive assembly. As discussed, certain of the devices may have multiple network cards. An input device 410 is used to provide user input to the processor 402, and may include a keyboard, mouse, pen-stylus, microphone, touch sensitive display screen, or any other activation or input mechanism known in the art. An output device 412 is capable of rendering information transmitted from the processor 402, or other component, such as a display monitor, printer, storage, etc.

The foregoing description of various embodiments has been presented for the purposes of illustration and description. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the embodiments to the precise form disclosed. Many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching 

1-19. (canceled)
 20. A method for interfacing storage units with an external device, comprising: communicating with one storage unit interfacing with a first physical interface in a slot of a storage enclosure when the storage unit is received in a first orientation with respect to the slot; and communicating with one storage unit interfacing with a second physical interface in the slot when the storage unit is received in a second orientation with respect to the slot, wherein the first and second physical interface supports different storage interconnect architectures.
 21. The method of claim 20, wherein the different storage interconnect architectures supported by the physical interfaces have different transmission characteristics.
 22. The method of claim 20, wherein the two physical interfaces in the slots have different physical configurations.
 23. The method of claim 20, wherein the physical interfaces each extend along a vertical length of the slot and are parallel to each other.
 24. The method of claim 20, wherein an expander on a backplane is coupled to the first and second physical interfaces in the slot, wherein communication with the storage unit using the different storage interconnect architectures occurs through the expander. interconnect architectures through the expander.
 25. The method of claim 24, wherein the expander performs: receiving a transmission from one storage unit in one slot coupled to the expander; maintaining information on storage interconnect architectures and transmission characteristics used for the storage interconnect architectures, wherein the storage interconnect architectures have transmission characteristics; determining the transmission characteristic of the received transmission; determining from the information the storage interconnect architecture associated with the determined transmission characteristics; using the information on the determined storage interconnect architecture to process the transmission and determine a transport layer for the received transmission, wherein there is one transport layer for each supported transport protocol; and forwarding the transmission to the determined transport layer.
 26. The method of claim 20, wherein the supported storage interconnect architectures comprise SATA, SAS, and Fibre Channel and wherein the supported transport protocols comprise SSP, Fibre Channel Protocol, STP, SMP, and SATA.
 27. The method of claim 20, wherein in the slots, one physical interface complies with the SATA/SAS storage interconnect architecture and another physical interface complies with the Fibre Channel storage interconnect architecture. 28-33. (canceled)
 34. The method of claim 20, wherein at least one physical interface supports multiple storage interconnect architectures
 35. The method of claim 20, further comprising: connecting a multidrop connection having a first end in communication with a server and a second and third ends coupled to the two interfaces in one slot. 